Published May 20, 2013
Valve Repair Activities per ASME Section I & B31.1 If you have valves in your plant manufactured from F-91 or C12A material you may have problems and need repair services.
By Joanna Button
Extensively trained personnel using specially developed welding and machining equipment made repairs on a variety of valves from all the major OEMs. Most of the 50 repairs were on valves ranging in size from 12” to 24”. Twenty-three projects were repairs of code boundary valves. These repairs were performed following the guidelines of ASME Section I and National Board Inspection Code as well as Jurisdictional requirements. Twenty-seven-plus valves were part of the boiler external piping. These repairs were performed following the guidelines of ASME B31.1.
Valves manufactured for use in the power generation sector are produced under the American National Standards as outlined in ASME B16.34 and requirements placed on specific valves by the customer. This standard applies to new construction and covers pressure-temperature ratings, dimensions and tolerances, materials NDE (non-destructive examination) requirements, testing, marking of cast, forged and fabricated valves with flanged, threaded or welded ends.
The manufacturers are responsible for providing the purchaser with documentation that details their quality program compliance in the manufacturing of their products. The requirements for manufacturing may be less stringent than those required to repair valves placed in service.
NDE acceptance standards on new valves manufactured are found in ASME B16.34 Mandatory Appendix II for Magnetic Particle Examination and Mandatory Appendix III for Liquid Penetrant Examination. Both provide procedure and acceptance standards for castings and forgings and rolled wrought material.
These standards are far less restrictive than those of ASME Section I or ASME B31.1.
Repair requirements of a valve are usually confined to the location of the valve in the boiler piping system of the power plant. If the valve to be repaired is located in the piping system–which is considered part of the boiler proper or part of the external boiler piping–it is declared to be inside the Boiler Code Boundary.
The Preamble to ASME Section I paragraphs 4, 5 & 7 provides the detailed information defining Code Boundary. Repairs to piping and valves within the Code Boundary are repaired using the requirements provided in ASME Section I, National Board Inspection Code (NBIC) and the jurisdiction of the repair. Most of the ASME Section I repairs can be segregated into three groups.
Valves with seats manufactured from A355-P22 (5A) material were replaced with like for like.
All seat rings were replaced using the following guidelines:
The other 50% of the repairs were on integral seats in the valves.
Integral seat repairs use the following guidelines:
According to this section, “All welding or brazing of pipes or items shall be performed by manufacturers or contractors authorized to use the appropriate symbol shown in Fig. PG-105-1 thru PT-105.3 of ASME Section I of the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code (B31.1 Chapter 1 100.1.2).”
The installer of external boiler piping jointed by welding or brazing is required to have a quality control system, meeting the requirements of Mandatory Appendix J of the ASME Section B31.1 Code.
The majority of the valves repaired under B31.1 have been parallel slide gate valves. The valve bodies have been A217-C12A material. The seat rings have been a mix of F91, P22 materials. As with the section I valves the defects have been the same: Seats cracking in the heat-affected zone on the body side of the body to seat ring weld and stellite breaking off the seat ring face and entering into the systems.
ASME B31.1 Chapter V
All examinations must be performed by technicians certified to perform each non-destructive examination per ASME B31.1 Chapter V-136.3.2 “Qualifications of NDE personnel.”
Once all the pertinent information is gathered, quality assurance and the welding departments begin the planning process:
Specialized machining and welding equipment has been developed for repairing each type of valve and their repairs. Equipment is staged and inspected on a similar valve mockup and tested before shipping to each project.
The “Recipe for Success” may seem simple, but care must be taken on each step to ensure the best possible result for each valve repair.
REFERENCES: ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code Section I “Rules for – Construction of Power Boilers.”B31.1. “ASME Code for Pressure Piping.” B16.34 “Valves – Flanged, Threaded, and Welding End,” American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, NY. USA.
Joanna Button is quality assurance manager at CFM/VR-TESCO, LLC. Reach her at Jbutton@globalfield.net
Editor’s Note: Contents of this article were originally presented at the Valve Manufacturers Association Technical Seminar in March 2013, by Scott Smith, SVP & General Manager, and Roy Button, Welding Engineer & Specialty Welding (WDI) Division Manager.
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